> pr-report

Review a pull request or contribution deeply, explain it tutorial-style for a maintainer, and produce a polished report artifact such as HTML or Markdown. Use when asked to analyze a PR, explain a contributor's design decisions, compare it with similar systems, or prepare a merge recommendation.

fetch
$curl "https://skillshub.wtf/paperclipai/paperclip/pr-report?format=md"
SKILL.mdpr-report

PR Report Skill

Produce a maintainer-grade review of a PR, branch, or large contribution.

Default posture:

  • understand the change before judging it
  • explain the system as built, not just the diff
  • separate architectural problems from product-scope objections
  • make a concrete recommendation, not a vague impression

When to Use

Use this skill when the user asks for things like:

  • "review this PR deeply"
  • "explain this contribution to me"
  • "make me a report or webpage for this PR"
  • "compare this design to similar systems"
  • "should I merge this?"

Outputs

Common outputs:

  • standalone HTML report in tmp/reports/...
  • Markdown report in report/ or another requested folder
  • short maintainer summary in chat

If the user asks for a webpage, build a polished standalone HTML artifact with clear sections and readable visual hierarchy.

Resources bundled with this skill:

  • references/style-guide.md for visual direction and report presentation rules
  • assets/html-report-starter.html for a reusable standalone HTML/CSS starter

Workflow

1. Acquire and frame the target

Work from local code when possible, not just the GitHub PR page.

Gather:

  • target branch or worktree
  • diff size and changed subsystems
  • relevant repo docs, specs, and invariants
  • contributor intent if it is documented in PR text or design docs

Start by answering: what is this change trying to become?

2. Build a mental model of the system

Do not stop at file-by-file notes. Reconstruct the design:

  • what new runtime or contract exists
  • which layers changed: db, shared types, server, UI, CLI, docs
  • lifecycle: install, startup, execution, UI, failure, disablement
  • trust boundary: what code runs where, under what authority

For large contributions, include a tutorial-style section that teaches the system from first principles.

3. Review like a maintainer

Findings come first. Order by severity.

Prioritize:

  • behavioral regressions
  • trust or security gaps
  • misleading abstractions
  • lifecycle and operational risks
  • coupling that will be hard to unwind
  • missing tests or unverifiable claims

Always cite concrete file references when possible.

4. Distinguish the objection type

Be explicit about whether a concern is:

  • product direction
  • architecture
  • implementation quality
  • rollout strategy
  • documentation honesty

Do not hide an architectural objection inside a scope objection.

5. Compare to external precedents when needed

If the contribution introduces a framework or platform concept, compare it to similar open-source systems.

When comparing:

  • prefer official docs or source
  • focus on extension boundaries, context passing, trust model, and UI ownership
  • extract lessons, not just similarities

Good comparison questions:

  • Who owns lifecycle?
  • Who owns UI composition?
  • Is context explicit or ambient?
  • Are plugins trusted code or sandboxed code?
  • Are extension points named and typed?

6. Make the recommendation actionable

Do not stop at "merge" or "do not merge."

Choose one:

  • merge as-is
  • merge after specific redesign
  • salvage specific pieces
  • keep as design research

If rejecting or narrowing, say what should be kept.

Useful recommendation buckets:

  • keep the protocol/type model
  • redesign the UI boundary
  • narrow the initial surface area
  • defer third-party execution
  • ship a host-owned extension-point model first

7. Build the artifact

Suggested report structure:

  1. Executive summary
  2. What the PR actually adds
  3. Tutorial: how the system works
  4. Strengths
  5. Main findings
  6. Comparisons
  7. Recommendation

For HTML reports:

  • use intentional typography and color
  • make navigation easy for long reports
  • favor strong section headings and small reference labels
  • avoid generic dashboard styling

Before building from scratch, read references/style-guide.md. If a fast polished starter is helpful, begin from assets/html-report-starter.html and replace the placeholder content with the actual report.

8. Verify before handoff

Check:

  • artifact path exists
  • findings still match the actual code
  • any requested forbidden strings are absent from generated output
  • if tests were not run, say so explicitly

Review Heuristics

Plugin and platform work

Watch closely for:

  • docs claiming sandboxing while runtime executes trusted host processes
  • module-global state used to smuggle React context
  • hidden dependence on render order
  • plugins reaching into host internals instead of using explicit APIs
  • "capabilities" that are really policy labels on top of fully trusted code

Good signs

  • typed contracts shared across layers
  • explicit extension points
  • host-owned lifecycle
  • honest trust model
  • narrow first rollout with room to grow

Final Response

In chat, summarize:

  • where the report is
  • your overall call
  • the top one or two reasons
  • whether verification or tests were skipped

Keep the chat summary shorter than the report itself.

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┌ stats

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github stars62.0K
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first seenMar 17, 2026
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┌ repo

paperclipai/paperclip
by paperclipai
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┌ tags

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